Device and method for imploding a microsphere with a fast liner

ABSTRACT

A device and method for relativistic electron beam heating of a high-density plasma in a small localized region. A relativistic electron beam generator or accelerator produces a high-voltage electron beam which propagates along a vacuum drift tube and is modulated to initiate electron bunching within the beam. The beam is then directed through a low-density gas chamber which provides isolation between the vacuum modulator and the relativistic electron beam target. The relativistic beam is then applied to a high-density target plasma which typically comprises DT, DD, hydrogen boron or similar thermonuclear gas at a density of 10 17  to 10 20  electrons per cubic centimeter. The target gas is ionized prior to application of the electron beam by means of a laser or other preionization source to form a plasma. Utilizing a relativistic electron beam with an individual particle energy exceeding 3 MeV, classical scattering by relativistic electrons passing through isolation foils is negligible. As a result, relativistic streaming instabilities are initiated within the high-density target plasma causing the relativistic electron beam to efficiently deposit its energy and momentum into a small localized region of the high-density plasma target. Fast liners disposed in the high-density target plasma are explosively or ablatively driven to implosion by a heated annular plasma surrounding the fast liner generated by an annular relativistic electron beam. An azimuthal magnetic field produced by axial current flow in the annular plasma, causes the energy in the heated annular plasma to converge on the fast liner to drive the fast liner to implode a microsphere.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

The present invention pertains generally to dense plasma heating and more particularly to plasma heating by way of a relativistic electron beam.

Plasma heating has, for some time, been of great interest to the scientific community, since heated plasmas can be utilized for a wide variety of functions. A typical use of hot plasmas is the generation of energy in the form of radiation, neutrons, and alpha particles. Such an energy source can be useful in basic high-energy density plasma physics research, with practical application in scientific areas such as controlled thermonuclear fusion, material studies, and radiography.

Numerous techniques have been proposed in the prior art to produce dense, kilovolt plasmas. One of the more well-known techniques is the compression and heating of the core of a structured pellet by a laser or low-voltage electron beam. It has also been suggested that light- or heavy-ion beams could be utilized to obtain similar compression and heating. According to this technique, the structured pellet and its driving source are directly coupled through classical interactions by heating the outer layer of the structured pellet. Depending upon the characteristics of both the structured pellet and driving source, the outer layer explodes or ablates, leading to compression and heating of the core. Due to the direct coupling of all of these prior art driving sources, preheat of the core has been found to reduce the effectiveness of the compression, thereby reducing both density and temperature of the pellet core.

The use of a laser as a driving source in the above described confinement system has the added inherent disadvantages of low efficiency and associated high-development cost to produce lasers with the required power output for a directly driven structured pellet. Also, diffraction limitations and window damage thresholds make it difficult to focus proposed large lasers to millimeter diameters.

Low-impedance electron and light-ion beams also face expensive technological advancement to enable these beams to be focused to millimeter diameters, and to obtain power levels necessary to achieve the desired compression of the structured pellet. Low-impedance electron and light-ion sources are additionally limited in the manner of propagation of the beam to the pellet.

Heavy-ion sources also require significant technological advancement to produce the desired compression of the structured pellet. In fact, development of heavy-ion sources using conventional accelerator concepts appears to be considerably more expensive than the cost associated with the development of lasers. Beam propagation is also a limitation when employing heavy-ion sources.

High-density, kilovolt plasmas can also be produced by fast liners. Such devices can be driven by either magnetic forces or high expolsives, both of which lead to compression and heating of a confined plasma. Although both of these fast liner techniques have produced energy in the form of radiation, neutrons, and alpha particles, each technique has its own inherent disadvantage. The primary disadvantage of the high explosive driven liner is that the high explosives have a maximum power density of approximately 10¹⁰ watts/cm³ and a maximum detonation velocity of 8.8×10⁵ cm/sec, which limits achievable liner implosion velocity. Althrough useful in obtaining scientific data, such a system would be difficult to develop into a reuseable apparatus.

Magnetically driven liners are fabricated such that the liner forms part of the electrical discharge circuit in which current flowing through the liner creates a large magnetic field causing the liner to compress. Since the liner forms part of the electrical circuit, the external circuit resistance and finite liner resistivity lead to ohmic losses which lower the efficiency of converting electrical energy into liner kinetic energy. Also, since the liner must make electrical contact with the circuit, damage to the electrode connection between the moving liner and the electrode limits operability.

For liners which essentially remain thin solid shells during the implosion, ohmic heating and magnetic field diffusion limits implosion velocities to approximately 1 cm/μsec. To obtain the desired radiation, neutron, and alpha particle output at such low implosion velocities, the plasma within the liner must be preionized and complex methods of overcoming heat conduction losses must be incorporated into the system.

Although liner implosion velocities exceeding 1 cm/μsec can be achieved, ohmic heating and magnetic field diffusion converts solid liners into plasmas during operation. As a result, the thickness of the liner is increased, which lowers the potential for power multiplication. Even with very thin foils, implosion velocities are limited by the risetime of the driving current and diffusion of the driving magnetic field through the plasma liner.

Lasers have also been used to directly heat a magnetically confined plasma. According to this concept, a laser is used to heat a large volume of plasma confined by an elaborate magnetic field system to thermonuclear temperatures. Although the laser provides uniform ionization and rapid heating of a low-temperature plasma, the characteristic deposition length increases approximately as T_(3/2) for plasma electron temperatures T22 10 eV. This characteristic of the deposition of laser energy in the plasma, coupled with the large volume of plasma to be heated, places a total energy requirement for the laser which substantially exceeds present technology. Even if such lasers could be developed, the inherent low efficiencies associated with generation of laser energy would result in a large-capital investment for such a system.

A similar system incorporates a light- or heavy-ion beam to deposit its energy in a magnetically confined plasma. Since such beams are nonrelativistic, they exhibit a very low coupling efficiency and lack versatility obtainable by the relativistic interaction.

The concept of using an intense relativistic electron beam to heat a confined plasma has been investigated experimentally for a number of years. Prior art experiments have concentrated primarily on heating a large volume of plasma to thermonuclear temperatures with an electron beam, while maintaining the plasma with an external magnetic field. A typical configuration of a prior art experimental apparatus is shown in FIG. 1. A cathode 10 is positioned within a vacuum chamber 12 which is separated from the plasma chamber 14 by an anode foil 16. A series of dielectric spacers 18 are separated by a series of metal plates 20, which function together to prevent breakdown between the cathode 10 and the diode support structure 22. A solenoidal or mirror magnetic field configuration 24 is produced by an external source.

In operation, a relativistic electron beam 26 is formed by charging the cathode 10 with a fast risetime high-voltage pulse, causing electrons to be field emitted from the cathode 10 penetrating the anode foil 16 so as to enter the plasma chamber 14 as a relativistic electron beam 26. As the relativistic beam propagates through the plasma along the externally applied axial magnetic field 24, the plasma is heated by the following methods:

(a) relaxation heating due to relativistic streaming instabilities (two-stream and upper-hybrid bunching instabilities); and,

(b) amomalous resistive heating due to the presence of a plasma return current (ion-acoustic and ion-cyclotron instabilities).

Typically, devices such as klystrons, magnetrons, vacuum tubes, etc., which are based upon electron bunching according to method (a) have been considered very efficient devices with respect to energy utilization. Therefore, the process of heating a plasma by electron bunching, i.e., by generating the two-stream and upper-hybrid instabilities according to method (a), was initially expected to be an efficient technique for producing a thermonuclear plasma. Although all early experiments observed anomalous (nonclassical) coupling of the beam energy to the plasma resulting from the presence of the streaming instabilities according to the method (a), the coupling efficiency was only on the order of 15% at plasma densities of approximately 10¹² electrons/cm³, and dropped rapidly to less than a few percent as the plasma density approached 10¹⁴ electrons/cm³. These results were obtained with anode foils having thicknesses on the order of 25 μm to 50 μm and conventional electron beams available for experiments during this period which typically had relatively low voltages, i.e., 1 MeV or less. This combination of relatively thick anode foils and low-voltage beams resulted in classical anode foil scattering of the beam which prevented the relativistic streaming instabilities from efficiently coupling the beam energy to the plasma. In other words, although unknown to the experimentalists and theoreticians during the period 1970-1975, the foil thickness and low voltage of the electron beams used in the experiments caused the electron beam to scatter in a manner which prevented substantial electron bunching in the beam. This, in turn, produced the observed rapidly decreasing energy absorption efficiencies as the plasma density approached 10¹⁴ electrons/cm³. As a result of these low observed efficiencies, scientific attention shifted toward investigation of the resistive heating mechanism according to method (b), which was known to have several scientifically interesting properties.

One property of the resistive heating mechanism of method (b) is its ability to place a substantial fraction of the beam energy into plasma ions. This differs from the streaming instabilities which primarily heat the plasma electrons. Since the ions must eventually be heated in a magnetically contained plasma, according to conventional magnetic confinement systems, direct heating of the ions eliminates an energy conversion step. Furthermore, when energy is initially deposited into plasma electrons rather than the ions, heat conduction is enhanced due to the initially elevated electron temperature, so that achievable plasma confinement time is shortened. Consequently, increased magnetic field strengths are required to produce comparable confinement.

Another property of the resistive heating mechanism is its ability to heat a large volume of plasma in a uniform manner, rather than depositing energy in a small localized region, as is characteristic of the optimized streaming instability mechanism. The ability to directly heat a large volume of plasma in a uniform manner by resistive heating thus avoids problems of heat redistribution within the plasma. Moreover, the potential for developing a plasma heating system which could also be used in conjunction with devices requiring preheated plasmas, such as tokamaks which has received substantial funding, renders the resistive heating mechanism even more attractive. For these reasons, experimental attention was directed from the onset of plasma heating experiments using relativistic electron beams towards producing resistive heating in plasmas according to method (b). Consequently, experimental apparatus to optimize resistive heating effects, such as low-voltage electron beams with high ν/γ outputs, were utilized in ongoing experiments of relativistic electron beam heated plasmas. Here, γ is the beam relativistic factor which is nearly proportional to the beam particle voltage. The ratio ν/γ is basically a measure of the beam self-magnetic field energy to beam particle energy. The increased use of high ν/γ beams is more graphically shown in FIGS. 2 and 3 which illustrate the decrease in maximum beam voltage and increase in maximum ν/γ for relativistic electron beam experiments between 1970 and 1975. Thus the prior art experiments have, from the beginning, concentrated on high ν/γ, low-voltage beams for optimizing the resistive heating mechanism according to method (b), virtually ignoring the effect of streaming instabilities produced according to method (a).

In so doing, prior art experiments, have clearly pointed out the limitations of resistive heating according to method (b), i.e., that resistive heating does not scale to higher density plasmas, but, to the contrary, is absolutely limited by self-stabilization within the plasma. More particularly, the experiments have shown that above a certain electron temperature, depending on the density of the plasma, low-frequency instabilities which are responsible for resistive heating, are stabilized. Consequently, only classical resistivity, which is inadequate to couple significant energy to the plasma from the relativistic electron beam, has any effect in resistively heating the plasma.

In addition to this inherent stabilization limitation, the technique of resistive heating has several other disadvantages. First, even if experiments had shown that resistive heating according to method (b) was effective at high plasma density, the required ν/γ for efficient coupling would be at least an order-of-magnitude higher than that achievable by present day technology. Second, since resistive heating is only suitable for low plasma densities which are very large in volume, the total energy required to heat such a plasma would again, be at least an order-of-magnitude beyond the total beam energy achievable by present technology standards.

As a result of these limitations, and the belief by prior art theoreticians and experimentalists that resistive heating dominated anomalous energy deposition in plasmas, the relativistic electron beam plasma heating program in the United States was virtually abolished in 1975 without any further investigation into the streaming instability heating mechanism.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

The present invention overcomes the disadvantages and limitations of the prior art by providing a device and method for electron beam heating of a high-density plasma to drive a fast liner to implode a structured microsphere. The present invention utilizes an annular relativistic electron beam to heat an annular plasma to kilovolt temperatures through streaming instabilities in the plasma. Energy deposited in the annular plasma then converges on a fast liner to explosively or ablatively drive the liner to convergence to implode the structured microsphere.

It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide a device and method for generating a hot plasma to dirve a fast liner to implode a structured microsphere.

It is also an object of the present invention to provide a device and method for driving a fast liner to implode a structured microsphere which is efficient in operation.

Another object of the present invention is to provide a device and method for power density multiplication.

Another object of the present invention is to provide a device and method for generating a hot plasma.

Another object of the present invention is to provide a device and method for generating energy in the form of radiation, neutrons, and/or alpha particles.

Another object of the present invention is to provide a device and method for generating energy which requires relatively low-capital investment.

Another object of the present invention is to provide a device and method for generating high-intensity radiation, neutrons, and/or alpha particles utilizing currently available technology.

Other objects and further scope of applicability of the present invention will become apparent from the detailed description given hereinafter. The detailed description, indicating the preferred embodiment of the invention is given only by way of illustration since various changes and modifications within the spirit and scope of the invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art from the detailed description. The foregoing abstract of the disclosure is for the purpose of providing a nonlegal brief statement to serve as a searching and scanning tool for scientists, engineers, and researchers and is not intended to limit the scope of the invention as disclosed herein, nor is it intended to be used in interpreting or in any way limiting the scope or fair meaning of the appended claims.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 is a schematic illustration of a typical prior art relativistic electron beam plasma heating device.

FIG. 2 is a graph of maximum experimental relativistic electron beam voltages utilized from 1970 to 1975.

FIG. 3 is a graph of maximum experimental ν/γ of relativistic electron beams utilized from 1970 to 1975.

FIG. 4 is a graph illustrating the characteristic relationship between the relativistic electron beam and plasma ions and electrons for resistive heating according to method (b). The graph illustrates the component of velocity along the direction of beam propagation V.sub.∥ (axis) versus the distribution function f_(a) (V.sub.∥) (ordinate).

FIG. 5 is a graph illustrating the characteristic relationship between the relativistic electron beam and plasma ions and electrons for relaxation heating according to method (a) of the present invention. The graph illustrates the component velocity along the direction of beam propagation V.sub.∥ (axis) versus the distribution function f_(a) (V.sub.∥) (ordinate).

FIG. 6 is a graph illustrating the characteristic nonuniform energy deposition (ordinate) along the direction of beam propagation (axis) associated with the streaming instabilities of method (a). A one-dimensional interaction is represented by the solid line while the dashed line represents a two-dimensional interaction.

FIG. 7 is a graph of the experimental scaling of plasma heating in joules (ordinate) versus the plasma particle density n_(p) in electrons/cm³ for three different anode foil thicknesses. Theoretical predications are indicated by solid curves.

FIG. 8 is a graph illustrating experimental results of beam energy transmitted to a calorimeter (ordinate) versus anode foil thickness for three different anode-cathode gap spacings.

FIG. 9 is a table of the foil scattering function F for seven different materials having various thicknesses measured in microns.

FIG. 10 is a graph of the dimensionless parameter Γ (ordinate) versus the relativistic factor γ (axis) for given values of plasma electron density in electrons/cm³.

FIG. 11 is a schematic diagram illustrating the primary components of a system utilizing high-energy density plasma as a direct source for radiation, neutrons, and/or alpha particles.

FIG. 12 is a schematic diagram illustrating the primary components of a system which utilizes a high-energy density plasma to drive a fast liner according to the preferred embodiment of the invention.

FIG. 13 is a schematic illustration of a two annular beam system providing cylindrical symmetry.

FIG. 14 is a schematic illustration of a two annular beam system providing spherical symmetry.

FIG. 15 is a schematic illustration of a four annular beam system which also provides spherical symmetry in a multi-megajoule system.

FIG. 16 is a schematic diagram illustrating the relative sizes of various relativistic electron beam generators relative to a 1.83 meter individual.

FIG. 17 is a graph illustrating the approximate cost per joule delivered (ordinate) as a function of total generator cost in thousands of dollars (axis).

FIG. 18 is a schematic illustration of the base components of a high-impedence relativistic electron beam generator.

FIG. 19 is a schematic illustration of the electrical equivalent of a Marx stage.

FIG. 20 is a schematic illustration of the electrical equivalent of a Blumlein and diode.

FIG. 21 is a schematic illustration of a multigap accelerator.

FIG. 22 is a graph of the characteristic growth rate and velocity change (ordinate) as a function of wave number for the streaming instabilities (axis).

FIG. 23 is a schematic illustration of an anomalous pinch.

FIG. 24 is a schematic illustration of a device for producing an anomalous pinch utilizing a single laser preionizer.

FIG. 25 is a schematic illustration of a device for producing an anomalous pinch utilizing two laser preionizers.

FIG. 26 is a schematic illustration of the end view of a device for producing an anomalous pinch utilizing three laser preionizers.

FIG. 27 is a schematic illustration of the basic geometry of a device for driving a fast spherical liner with an annular relativistic beam.

FIG. 28 is a schematic illustration of the basic geometry for driving a fast cylindrical liner with an annular relativistic electron beam.

FIG. 29 is a schematic cross-sectional view of a spherical liner configuration with dual ionization beams.

FIG. 30 is a schematic illustration of a cross-sectional view of cylindrical liner configuration with dual ionization beams.

FIG. 31 is a schematic illustration of a cross-sectional view of a fast spherical liner.

FIG. 32 is a schematic illustration of a cross-sectional view of a fast cylindrical liner.

FIG. 33 is a schematic illustration of a cross-sectional view of an alternative fast liner device.

FIG. 34 is a schematic illustration of the target geometry utilizing two annular relativistic electron beams to drive a spherical liner, in the manner indicated in FIG. 14.

FIG. 35 is a schematic illustration of the baisc geometry for fast spherical liner implosion of a structured microsphere.

FIG. 36 is a schematic illustration of the basic geometry for fast cylindrical liner implosion of a structured microsphere.

FIG. 37 is a schematic illustration of a cross-sectional view of a fast spherical liner and a structured microsphere.

FIG. 38 is a schematic illustration of a cross-sectional view of a fast cylindrical liner and a structured microsphere.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT OF THE INVENTION

Central to the concept of the preferred embodiment of the invention is the rapid heating of a 10¹⁷ -20²⁰ electrons/cm³, 3 cm³ to 50 cm³ volume of plasma by an intense, high-voltage relativistic electron beam. Efficient coupling is achieved through optimization and control of a very powerful collective wave interaction, which occurs naturally when a directed stream of electrons passes through a plasma.

The anomalous transfer of relativistic electron beam energy and momentum into thermal and directed plasma energy, respectively, is nonclassical and, therefore, the strength of the nonlinear state of the microinstabilities depends upon a large number of factors. The characteristic nonuniform energy deposition of the collective interaction is utilized to concentrate the energy in the plasma. In fact, the optimized relativistic electron beam-plasma interaction is a power density multiplication process. Since energy is being transferred from relativistic beam electrons to nonrelativistic electrons in the plasma, conservation of energy and momentum require that the interaction both heat and drive a localized axial current in the plasma. The driven axial current, in turn, generates an azimuthal magnetic field.

If the relativistic beam is solid, the physical configuration is similar to a nonuniform denze Z pinch in which the azimuthal magnetic field provides confinement. However, in contrast to a classical Z pinch, the heating and confinement are anomalous in character. For an annular relativistic electron beam, the azimuthal magnetic field leads to a directed heat flow towards the axis of the device. In this configuration, the kilovolt plasma is used to drive a hierarchy of inertial confinement devices according to the present invention.

Early theory by R. V. Lovelace and R. N. Sudan, Phys. Rev. Letter 27, 1256 (1971), indicated that resistive heating according to method (b) was a very efficient process for beams with ν/γ>>1. As pointed out above, ν/γ is a measure of the beam self-magnetic field energy to the beam particle energy. Defining N as the line density of beam electrons and r_(e) as the classical electron radius, ν≡Nr_(e) for a solid, constant density beam. The relativistic factor γ=(1-β²)^(-1/2) and β=v/c are, in this manner, related to the beam velocity v and speed of light c. The basic idea behind anomalous resistive heating is that a ν/γ>1 beam cannot propagate since its self-magnetic field energy exceeds its particle energy. But, when such a beam is injected into a plasma, it neutralizes this characteristically large self-magnetic field energy by inducing a plasma return current. The relationship between the plasma and beam species in velocity space for a magnetically neutralized beam is shown in FIG. 4. Due to the relative drift between the plasma electron and ion species, ion-acoustic and/or ion-cyclotron waves are generated, as illustrated in FIG. 4 by the dashed lines. Such microturbulence is known to manifest itself as anomalous resistance. Thus, the plasma is heated at a rate

    dW.sub.p /dt=η*J.sub.p.sup.2,                          (1)

where W_(p) is the plasma energy density, η* is the anomalous resistivity, and J_(p) is the plasma return current density. At the same time, the macroscopic electric field which maintains the return current, in order for the beam to propagate, removes energy from the beam. In this fashion, energy is transferred from the beam and deposited into plasma electrons and ions.

In contrast to resistive heating described above, relaxation heating according to method (a) results from the relative drift between the relativistic beam electrons and plasma electrons. Optimally, these instabilities take the form of electron bunching at a wavelength of

    λ≅(1-4) [10.sup.20 /n.sub.e (cm.sup.-3)].sup.1/2 μm (2)

and a frequency of

    f≅[n.sub.e (cm.sup.-3)/10.sup.16 ].sup.1/2 THz,  (3)

where n_(e) is the plasma electron density. The characteristic relationship between the plasma and beam species for optimized relaxation heating is illustrated in FIG. 5. Locally, the net current I_(net) within the beam channel can exceed the beam current I_(b), in contrast to the magnetically neutralized beam where I_(net) ≅0 within the beam channel. As stated, this current multiplication is a consequence of momentum conservation, and is a very localized phenomenon. The location of the unstable spectrum for these instabilities is indicated by dashed lines in FIG. 5.

The present invention, in contrast to prior art plasma heating techniques takes advantage of the natural characteristics of two extremely powerful microinstabilities, i.e., the two-stream and upper-hybrid instabilities illustrated in FIG. 5, to locally heat a small volume of plasma in the form of an annulus to kilovolt temperatures. Essentially, the instabilities are created by the relative drift between the relativistic beam electrons and target plasma electrons. Although a large number of parameters influence this collective interaction, the dominant factors in determining the strength of the instabilities are (1) beam temperature along a streamline, and (2) the wavelength of the instabilities relative to the radial dimension of the target plasma.

In prior art experimentation, beam temperature along a streamline occurs primarily from the passage of the relativistic electrons of the beam through the foil dividing the low-density plasma and diode vacuum. The effect of the foil can be made negligible by (1) increasing the electron energy, (2) reducing the thickness of foil, or (3) reducing the effective Z of the foil material. As a result, a high-voltage, i.e., exceeding 3 MeV, electron beam can, in fact, penetrate a number of foils and still deposit its energy efficiently in the high-density plasma.

By utilizing plasmas of high-density, the wavelength of the instabilities are small compared to the radial dimensions of the plasma. Thus, although the instantaneous deposition rate can vary, the nonlinear evolution of the instability functions to relax the beam distribution in both angle and energy, resulting in an efficient coupling of beam energy to the plasma.

The characteristic nonuniform energy deposition of the collective interaction, i.e., two-stream and upper-hybrid instabilities along the direction of beam propagation, is illustrated in FIG. 6. A one-dimensional interaction is represented by the solid line while the dashed line represents a two-dimensional interaction. This nonuniform deposition property is utilized to concentrate energy deposited into the plasma from the relativistic electron beam, rather than allowing the energy to dissipate its explosive character by expansion into a large volume of plasma. The initial deposition of beam energy is into plasma electrons which, depending upon the parameters of the device, results, in (1) heating conduction which is used propitiously to obtain power multiplication, or in (2) current multiplication and confinement of the plasma. In this manner, the disadvantages of preferential heating of plasma electrons associated with magnetically confined plasmas is advantageously employed in the present invention.

The potential efficiency of relativistic beam energy deposition into a dense plasma via the streaming instability mechanism has heretofore been unknown in the prior art. FIG. 7 illustrates results of recent experiments performed according to the present invention in which energy deposition is plotted against plasma density for the application of a relativistic beam through anode foils having various thicknesses. As is apparent from the data of FIG. 7, a reduction in the anode foil thickness causes a great increase in deposition energy into the plasma. These results show that the basic coefficient of coupling α of the streaming instability deposition varies in the following manner:

    α=χS[1-exp (-χS/F)]/(1+χS)               (4)

where S≡β² γ (n_(b) /2n_(e))^(1/3) is the strength parameter, F is a function depending upon the foil thickness and material, n_(b) is the beam density, n_(e) is the plasma electron density, and χ=1.0-1.3 is a parameter associated with beam premodulation.

It is therefore apparent from efficiency equation (4) that if either the beam voltage (γ) is increased, or the foil function (F) reduced by decreasing the foil's effective Z or thickness, the factor exp(-χS/F) approaches zero, such that the efficiency increases in direct proportion to χS/(1+χS). Thus, the coupling efficiency is large for high-density plasma targets when high-voltage beams are utilized. Moreover, these coupling efficiencies can be obtained with little or no advancement in present relativistic electron beam technology since beams with voltage parameters sufficiently high to practice the present invention presently exist. As a result, currently available high-voltage relativistic electron beams are capable of achieving high energy deposition due to the ability of the high-voltage beams to penetrate the anode foil with reduced electron beam scattering. Thus, beams with ν/γ≲1 achieve much higher coupling efficiencies via the streaming instabilities than beams with ν/γ>>1 which are designed to optimize the resistive heating mechanism when using high-density plasma targets.

FIG. 8 illustrates results of an additional experiment showing propagation distance in a high-density plasma with various foil thicknesses and anode-cathode gap spacing. In this experiment a 7 MeV beam was injected into a 43 cm long, 0.4 torr H₂ gas target. No external magnetic field was present. The beam energy transmitted to a calorimeter located 43 cm from the anode foil was measured as a function of the anode-cathode gap spacing and anode foil thickness. Anode foils of 25.4 μm kapton and 25.4 μm, 76.2 μm, 127.0 μm, and 304.8 μm titanium were used. FIG. 8 shows a strong experimental dependence of the transmitted beam energy on the anode thickness and anode-cathode gap spacing. Ten centimeter long witness plates starting at the anode foil on the bottom of the gas container showed significant damage when the kapton foil was used, but showed little or no damage when the thicker titanium foils were used. The distortion of the anode foil was also found to depend dramatically upon foil thickness. Independent of foil thickness, the center region through which the beam passed was completely gone. However, the observed debris protruded in the direction of beam propagation for the thicker titanium foils, while the kapton foil showed debris protruding in the opposite direction. These results indicate formation of hot plasma in the vicinity of the thin foils and severe disruption of beam propagation as foil scattering is reduced due to a mechanism which depends upon microscopic properties of the beam distribution function. Furthermore, the distance over which such a disruption occurs is approximately 5 to 10 cm with the kapton foil, while the classical range for a 7 MeV electron in 0.4 torr H₂ gas is approximately 10⁴ meter. These observations, as well as the scaling with the anode-cathode gap, illustrate the effect of the streaming instability.

The basic dependence among the beam relativistic factor γ=(1-β²)^(-1/2), beam particle density n_(b), and plasma electron particle density n_(e), is given by the strength parameter S=β² γ (n_(b) /2n_(e))^(1/3). The potentially large coupling efficiency associated with the relativistic streaming instabilities is a consequence of the relativistic dynamics, the strength of which depends upon S. Specifically, if an electron undergoes a change in velocity δβ=δv/c, its change in energy is δγ=γ³ βδβ/(1+γ² βδβ). For the streaming instabilities, the characteristic change in velocity incurred during bunching is δβ≅γ⁻¹ (n_(b) /2n_(e))^(1/3) β. It follows that

    δγ/γ≅S/(1+S)                   (5)

which can be of order unity.

A more detailed one-dimensional analysis indicates that not all the beam electrons act coherently during the bunching process, since their individual responses vary with energy. Basically, this is due to phase mixing. Denoting α as the coupling coefficient, the one-dimensional analysis yields

    α=1.5 S/(1+1.5 S).sup.5/2,                           (6)

which maximizes at S≅0.45 with α≅0.19. This rather high optimum efficiency for a one-dimensional analysis is still believed to be the maximum efficiency obtainable by the great majority of the plasma physics community.

In reality, the assumption that the nonlinear state is one-dimensional as shown by the solid line in FIG. 6, is physically incorrect for an optimized interaction and more clearly resembles the dashed line of FIG. 6, which is the result of a two-dimensional analysis. Since the relativistic electron beam will relax strongly in both energy and angle, it is necessary to carry out a self-consistent, two-dimensional, fully relativistic nonlinear calculation to determine the coupling coefficient. Such calculations can only be carried out using advanced particle code techniques. Because such codes are expensive to run and cannot be employed for all physical parameter regimes of interest, an analytical procedure or model has been developed which determines the magnitude of various parameters for optimal interactions which is disclosed in Los Alamos Scientific Report LA-7215-MS (April 1978) by Lester E. Thode entitled "Preliminary Investigation of Anomalous Relativistic Electron Beam into a 10¹⁷ to 10²⁰ cm⁻³ Density Plasma" available at the Library of Congress. From this model and extensive numerical particle simulations, the phase mixing present in the one-dimensional analysis can be overcome by the angular relaxation of the beam, and an optimal coupling efficiency of

    α.sub.optimal ≅S/(1+S)                     (7)

appears achievable.

The factors which influence the coupling coefficient include the following:

(1) beam relativistic factor,

(2) beam particle density,

(3) plasma particle density,

(4) beam temperature along a streamline,

(5) Larmor radius effects resulting from radially dependent ordered transverse motion,

(6) wavelength of instability relative to radial size of the beam and plasma,

(7) radial plasma gradients,

(8) externally applied magnetic field strength,

(9) plasma temperature,

(10) electron-ion and eletron-neutral collision rate,

(11) ionization state of plasma and ionization gradients,

(12) plasma hydrodynamic gradients,

(13) beam pinching resulting from current multiplication,

(14) premodulation, and

(15) time dependence of the electron beam power.

It has been found that the electron random motion or temperature along a streamline and the wavelength of the instabilities relative to the radial size of the plasma primarily determines the ability of the interaction to sustain a high coupling efficiency over the entire beam pulse, as pointed out above.

Beam temperature along a streamline can result from the random motion associated with the temperature of the cathode surface. However, transverse temperatures of 300-1000 eV at the emission surface are required before this source of random motion begins to degrade the interaction. Due to the high-voltage applied to the cathode, electrons are field emitted with typical transverse energies of 1 to 20 eV. Thus, this source of random motion is negligible in the invention.

A possibly more serious source of random motion is electron emission from the cathode shank and lack of beam equilibrium at the emission surface. However, by shaping the cathode and anode surfaces properly, and by simultaneously applying an external magnetic field to the diode region, this source of random motion can also be reduced to a negligible level.

In fact, beam temperature along a streamline seems to result primarily from the passage of relativistic electrons through thin foils. Extensive analysis has shown that the effect of such a foil on the interaction can be made negligible. The effect of a foil is to reduce the fraction of beam electrons Δn/n_(b) which can act coherently during the development of the instability. This fraction is determined as follows:

    Δn/n.sub.b =1-exp(-χS/F).                        (8)

Tyical values for the foil scattering function (F) are given in the table of FIG. 9. It follows that increasing γ and decreasing the foil's effective thickness results in the factor exp(-χS/F) approaching zero. Thus, the beam can penetrate a closed container and retain a high coupling efficiency to the enclosed target plasma.

It has generally been argued that the transverse motion associated with the beam self-fields comprises an effective temperature. If no external magnetic field is present and the beam is injected into a plasma in order to obtain equilibrium, such ordered motion can evolve into random motion. However, for the optimized interaction, the coherence length of the beam is long relative to the deposition length. Thus, high-voltage, low ν/γ beams in a focused flow configuration can interact strongly with a plasma, provided the plasma begins at the anode foil and Δn/n_(b) ≅1.

If the target plasma is also high-density, the wavelength associated with the streaming instabilities is very short compared to the radial dimensions of the beam and plasma, Eq. (2). Under these conditions, the optimal nonlinear evolution of the instability is highly two-dimensional, and once initiated is extremely difficult to degrade. The formation of plasma hydrodynamic gradients and beam pinching due to current multiplication results in the instantaneous deposition rate varying in time. Such a time variation is not monotonic, however.

The distance over which the relativistic electron beam can deposit upwards of S/(1+S) of its kinetic energy is

    L.sub.N ≅10 γ(n.sub.e /n.sub.b).sup.1/3 c/ω.sub.p , (9)

where ω_(p) is the target plasma frequency and c is the speed of light. This is orders of magnitude shorter than the classical range of megavolt electrons in a 10¹⁷ -10²⁰ cm⁻³ density plasma. For example, if n_(b) (γ) is determined from one-dimensional, relativistic foil diode result, such as disclosed by H. R. Jory and A. W. Trivelpiece, J. Appl. Phys. 40, 3924 (1969),

    L.sub.N ≅Γ(γ) (d.sup.2 /M).sup.1/3 cm. (10)

In Eq. (10) the diode gap spacing is d and the adiabatic compression ratio is M. The dimensionless parameter Γ(γ) is shown for given values of the plasma electron density n_(e) in FIG. 10. Because wave e-fold from noise, most of the beam energy is actually deposited over a length shorter than L_(N) by a factor of 2 to 3. The characteristic nonuniform energy deposition of the collective mechanisms, two-stream and upper-hybrid instabilities, is shown in FIG. 6, for both the one- and two-dimensional interactions. According to the present invention, this nonuniform deposition property is utilized to concentrate energy deposited into the plasma from the relativistic electron beam, as opposed to prior art experimentation wherein energy is allowed to dissipate its explosive character by expansion into a much larger volume of plasma.

Two basic approaches for utilizing a relativistic electron beam driven, high-energy density plasma to produce radiation, neutrons, and/or alpha particles are possible.

The first approach is a direct use of the plasma as the source by confining its energy for a sufficient length of time as disclosed in copending applicaton Ser. No. 882,024 entitled "Device and Method for Electron Beam Heating of a High Density Plasma" filed Feb. 28, 1978 by Lester E. Thode. According to this approach, a solid relativistic electron beam penetrates a 3 cm³ to 50 cm³ gas filled container, and transfers a fraction of its energy and momentum to the enclosed gas. Conservation of energy and momentum requires that the beam both heat the plasma and drive a large axial plasma current. The presence of the large axial current, in turn, initiates additional plasma ion heating and confinement. This configuration is similar to a dense Z-pinch. At high plasma density the option for predominantly heating electrons or heating both electrons and ion exists. This is possible because the classical equipartition time between the plasma species and the anomalous elecron and ion heating rates can be varied significantly. FIG. 11 discloses a schematic diagram of the major components of a device which uses the high-energy density plasma as a source.

According to the present invention, an annular relativistic electron beam is utilized to penetrate a 3 cm³ to 50 cm³ gas filled container, and to transfer a fraction of its energy and momentum to the enclosed gas. Again, conservation of energy and momentum causes the beam to both heat the plasma and drive a large axial plasma current. Since the heated plasma is annular, the large axial current leads to directed heat flow towards the interior of the annular region, where a fast liner is disposed which is engulfed and driven inwardly by hot electrons to implode a structured microsphere. The fast liner functions as a power multiplier, which is cylindrical, spherical, or ellipsoidal in shape. By adjusting the electron heating rate and plasma density, the liner can be driven by either ablation or exploding pusher to implode the structured microsphere. Also, control of the driving electron temperature and distribution is accomplished by varying the plasma density and magnitude of the external magnetic field. A conceptual diagram of the major components of a system to utilize a high-energy density plasma to drive power multiplication conversion devices is shown in FIG. 12.

Many modifications and variations of the configurations shown in FIGS. 11 and 12 are possible. For example, various applications of the concept do not require the use of a low-density gas chambers 52 and 94, modulators 38 and 80, drift tubes and adiabatic compressors 36 and 78, or multigap accelerators 32 and 74. With advances in relativistic electron beam technology, external magnetic field sources 70 and 110, preionizers 62 and 64, 104 and 106, and windows 54 to 60, and 96 to 102 can be eliminated. With annular beams, multiple beam systems are possible, as depicted in FIGS. 13 through 15. For multiple beam systems, the energy deposition regions do not overlap, allowing such systems to drive larger power multiplication devices.

To practice the present invention, a high-voltage, high-current density relativistic electron beam is required for the reasons set forth above. Presently, a number of high-impedance generators are in use, such as the PI23-100, PI15-90, PI14-80, and PI950 which are schematically illustrated in FIG. 16. Here, PI refers to the Physics International Company, the first number is the diameter of the Blumlein in feet, and the second number is the number of stages in the Marx generator. As shown in FIG. 16, the generators are relatively compact in size for the energy delivered. Also, the time to design and build such generators is relatively short. For example, the PI14-80 was recently designed and built in eight months. As shown in FIG. 17, the cost of the technology is relatively inexpensive. State of the art generators produce a 16 to 20 MeV, 400 to 800 kA electron beam with a pulse width of approximately 100 ns. The overall electrical efficiency for such a generator is approximately 40% to 45%. If the energy remaining in the Marx generator is recovered, the energy efficiency of such a generator is 80% to 90%.

As shown in FIG. 18, high-impedance generators are composed of five basic components. A dc charging system 116 is used to charge the Marx generator 118, which is the primary energy storage component. The Marx generator 118 consists of a large number of stages which are charged in parallel and discharged in series using spark gap switches. FIG. 19 schematically illustrates the electrical equivalent of a Marx stage which consists of two capacitances 126 and 128 connected in series with a center ground to allow positive and negative dc charging.

The Marx generator is then used to charge a Blumlein 120 such as schematically illustrated in FIG. 20. A Blumlein 120 is essentially two coaxial transmission lines 130 and 131 connected in series with the diode impedance 134 Z_(D). Physically, the Blumlein appears as three concentric, annular conductors. This folded configuration is used to reduce the spatial dimension of the Blumlein. In operation, the center conductor 132 is charged through an inductor 138 having an inductance L_(c) which appears as a short. Once charged, the switch 136 is closed and the transmission line 131 begins to discharge with a pulse propagating toward the diode 134. When the pulse hits the impedance discontinuity (Z_(D)) of diode 134, a voltage appears across the diode 134. As opposed to the shorted transmission line 131, which has an impedance Z_(I), the transmission line 130, which impedance Z_(O), is open. Thus, for a properly matched configuration (Z_(O) =Z_(I) =Z_(D) /2), a voltage equal to charge voltage on the inner conductor 132 appears across the diode 134 for a period twice the propagation time down any one of the transmission lines 130 or 131. The inductor 138 appears as an open circuit during the Blumlein discharge. For high voltages the Blumlein 120 uses transformer oil as a dielectric.

Due to the physical configuration of the Blumlein 120, it is difficult to design the transmission lines 130 and 131 such that Z_(I) =Z_(O). As a result, there is typically a very small, but non-negligible, voltage that appears across the diode 134 during the Blumlein charge, due to stray capacitances and inductances which is referred to as a prepulse. From the standpoint of proper operation of a high-current density diode, this prepulse must be suppressed. Significant progress in prepulse suppression has occurred in the past few years. Through the use of prepulse switches 122 combined with careful design of the feed and diode region, a prepulse of less than 50 kV has been demonstrated for a 9 Blumlein charge. With this advance in prepulse suppression, beam particle densities exceeding 10¹⁴ electrons/cm³ have been obtained in a focused flow configuration. More recently, however, a technique utilizing water as a dielectric, rather than oil in a Blumlein configuration, has been developed by Maxwell laboratories of San Diego, Calif., which reduces prepulse voltage to less than 1 kV for multi-megavolt beams. This very low prepulse voltage provided by the Maxwell Laboratories configuration appears to be the preferred method of operation.

The final component is the diode 124, which can be either foil or foilless. Foil diodes suffer rapid impedance collapse when the current density exceeds 20 kA/cm². The physics of this problem has not, however, been considered in a systematic fashion and current densities up to 100 kA/cm² should be obtainable with improved vacuum systems.

Foilless diodes are naturally suited for the device of the present invention since annular beams are readily produced at high current densities. However, the operation and flow characteristics of such diodes could be significantly advanced. A detailed discussion of the potential of the foilless diode is disclosed in Los Alamos Scientific Report LA-7169-P by Lester E. Thode entitled "A Proposal for Study of Vacuum Adiabatic Compression of a Relativistic Electron Beam Generated by a Foilless Diode."

Pulsed high-current electron beams with particle energy exceeding 20 MeV can be produced with a multigap accelerator, as schematically illustrated in FIG. 21. The multigap accelerator is basically a linear accelerator with radial transmission lines or Blumleins providing energy to the accelerating gaps 146. Radial lines 140 are composed of coaxial disk or cone conductors which are stacked in series. As a result, the accelerator is amenable to mass production, probably at a cost of less than $5/joule delivered. In addition, the development time of a 200 to 800 kJ, 5 to 20 TW, 10 to 100 cycle per second prototype accelerator is less than five years. The injector 144 for such an accelerator can be the high-current electron beam generator disclosed infra, or the first accelerating stage of the accelerator. Fabrication of such accelerators is disclosed by A. I. Pavlovskii et al., Sov. Phys. - Dokl. 20, 441 (1975), in an article entitled "Multielement Accelerators Based on Radial Lines."

Referring again to FIGS. 11 and 12, the relativistic electron beams 34 and 76 propagate along the vacuum drift tube and adiabatic compressors 36 and 78 to the modulators 38 and 80. External solenoidal magnetic field sources 40 and 82 generate a magnetic field in the generator diode, accelerator, drift tube, and modulator regions to ensure a laminar flow beam equilibrium. In the vacuum drift tubes 36 and 78, the strength of the external magnetic field can be increased along the direction of beam propagation to produce adiabatic beam compression. Modest compression ratios can reduce the beam radius a factor of 2 to 3, while preserving a laminar flow equilibrium, provided the compression is carried out in vacuum. Vacuum systems 42 and 84 maintain the required vacuum.

Modulators 38 and 80 constitute an inner portion of the vacuum drift tubes 36 and 78 and are formed by a periodic structure or dielectric layer along the direction of beam propagation. Alternatively, a rippled magnetic field could be utilized to weakly bunch the beam. The purpose of modulators 38 and 80 is to provide an enhanced narrow band noise level (very weak modulation) at a wavelength and phase velocity slightly below the natural wavelength and phase velocity of the instability in the target plasma.

The underlying idea behind this weak modulation is increased coupling efficiency. For waves propagating along the relativistic electron beam axis, the characteristic growth rate δ/ω_(P) and characteristic change in beam velocity δβ=2(β-ω/kc) for the streaming instability as a function of the wave number k=2π/λ is shown in FIG. 22. Here ω/k is the phase velocity associated with the electrostatic spectrum, and v is the initial beam velocity. The growth rate is normalized to the plasma frequency ω_(p). For an unmodulated beam the nonlinear evolution of the streaming instability is determined by the fastest growing wave, which occurs at kv/ω_(p) =1.1 in this example. The beam energy loss is determined by ##EQU1## as described previously.

By enhancing the noise level at a wavelength and phase velocity slightly shorter and slightly lower than the fastest growing wave, the beam energy loss is determined by βδ(modulated) shown in FIG. 22. The coupling efficiency is then increased to ##EQU2## where χ≅1.0 to 1.3 based upon analysis of the modulated interaction. Physically, the modulation leads to an enhanced strength parameter(χS). The modulation also reduces the effect of foil scattering and collisions on the interaction.

The low-density gas chambers 52 and 94 provide isolation between the replaceable target plasma containers 66 and 108 and modulators 38 and 80, drift tube and adiabatic compressors 36 and 78, accelerators 32 and 74, and generators 30 and 72 of FIGS. 11 and 12, respectively. The electron density in the ionized low-density plasma channels 46 and 88 is typically close to the relativistic electron beam density, whereas in the target plasmas 68 and 112 the electron density is 4 to 6 orders of magnitude above the beam density. The low-density gases 50 and 92 comprise either H₂, He, Ar, N₂ or residual gas associated with the previous operation of the system.

Foils 44 and 86 provide isolation between the vacuum modulators 38 and 80 and the low-density plasma channels 46 and 88, and convert a small fraction of the rising beam impulse into Bremsstrahlung radiation which is directed predominantly along the direction of beam propagation. The isolation function is provided by a layer of metal (titanium, aluminum, or beryllium), graphite, or plastic, such as mylar (C₁₀ H₈ O₄), kapton (C₂₂ H₁₀ N₂ O₅), or polycarbonate. A layer of plastic impregnated with high Z atoms, a fine mesh high Z wire screen with a very high optical transparency, or a high Z aperturing layer can be used to provide the Bremsstrahlung radiation. Bremsstrahlung radiation generated in this manner, aids in the creation of low-density plasma channels 46 and 88 for beam propagation through the low-density gases 50 and 92. With advances in relativistic electron beam technology, foils 44 and 86 can be eliminated in favor of strong differential pumping of the modulator regions 38 and 80.

Foils 48 and 90, provide isolation between the low-density plasma channel 46 and the dense target plasma and are constructed in a fashion similar to foils 44 and 86. Foils 48 and 90 also act to initiate the collective interaction and generate Bremsstrahlung radiation for partial ionization of the dense plasma target to assist or replace preionizers 62 and 64, 104 and 106.

In the ionized low-density plasma channels 46 and 88 and in the target plasma, the self-fields of the beam are shorted out so that an external magnetic field is not required to achieve beam equilibrium. Thus, the beam can be ballistically guided through low-density plasma channels 46 and 88 to the plasma target. However, the overall efficiency of the system is enhanced by the presence of external magnetic field sources 70 and 110. Also, external magnetic field sources 70 and 110 provide increased stabilization of the relativistic electron beam within low-density plasma channels 46 and 88, respectively.

Preionizers 62 and 64, 104 and 106 provide full ionization of target plasmas 68 and 112, respectively. Any number of devices for creating a fully-ionized gas, such as discharge tubes, channel forming wires, various lasers including electron beam driven free electron lasers, plasma guns, microwave generators, or low-energy particle beams, can be used. The laser, however, is the best device for creating a low-temperature, fully-ionized plasma in the 10¹⁷ to 10²⁰ electrons/cm³ density region.

With a laser preionizer, windows 54 to 60 and 96 to 102, formed from sapphire, salt, or other appropriate materials, are positioned in the low-density gas chambers 52 and 94 and target plasma containers 66 and 108, respectively. For a fully-ionized target density of 8×10¹⁸ to 10²⁰ electrons/cm³, a 0.1 μs to 2.0 μs, 0.2 kJ to 10 kJ HF laser, or a number of smaller HF lasers, can be used as preionizers 62 and 64, 104 and 106. A 0.1 μs to 2.0 μs, 0.2 kJ to 3 kJ CO₂ laser, or a number of smaller CO₂ lasers, are appropriate for fully ionizing gases with densities less than 8×10¹⁸ electrons/cm³.

The combination of Bremsstrahlung radiation produced at foils 48 and 90, direct impact ionization by the beam, avalanche, and the initial collective interaction is capable of fully ionizing the target plasma. However, the beam requirements are more stringent when the relativistic beam provides both ionization and heating of the target plasma. Use of preionizers 62 and 64, 104 and 106, therefore lowers the relativistic electron beam technology requirements.

The anomalous pinch, as disclosed in the above referenced copending application and illustrated in FIG. 11, is the simplest mode of operation and provides a basis for employment of the fast liner device comprising the present invention. The relativistic electron beam target is a simple gas-filled container of DT, DD or HB. As a neutron source, the anomalous pinch intrinsically requires a very high-density plasma of at least 10¹⁹ electrons/cm³.

As an alternative approach to a pulsed neutron source, the anomalous pinch can be operated as a target for an intense deuterium beam generated by the rapidly developing pulse power light-ion beam technology. Operating with a plasma density of approximately 10¹⁸ electrons/cm³, the plasma electron temperature can be elevated sufficiently to reduce the cross section for deuterium beam energy absorption by target plasma electrons. Thus, the probability of survival of trapped energetic deuterium ions to undergo fusion with the plasma deuterium and tritium ions is significantly enhanced. Although this two component concept is old, intense neutron pulses can be produced using present pulse power technology.

Moreover, a moderate Z gas or a mixture of H₂ and high Z gas with an electron density of 10¹⁷ -10¹⁹ cm⁻³ can be used as the target plasma 68 of the device of FIG. 11 to produce radiation. In the radiation mode, beryllium windows in the target plasma container 66 are used and the low-density gas chamber 52 is eliminated. Such a tunable radiation source is suitable for a variety of applications.

The device of FIG. 11 operates by applying the relativistic electron beam 34 to low-density gas chamber 52 such that beam 34 penetrates foil 48 with negligible scattering and initiates convective wave growth such that the waves e-fold until saturated through nonlinear trapping of the beam electrons. Since the nonlinear waves are not normal plasma modes, they are absorbed into the plasma very rapidly through nonlinear mode beating. Actually, this nonlinear mode beating acts throughout the entire interaction and keeps the level of electric field energy relatively low compared with the energy transferred from the beam to the plasma. The presence of the foil 48 thus ensures that the beam energy is deposited at a specified location within the target plasma container 66, as opposed to moving upstream.

Since energy and momentum are being transferred from relativistic electrons 34 to nonrelativistic electrons within the target plasma 68, the beam both heats and drives an axial current in the target plasma. The presence of the axial current, in turn, initiates plasma energy confinement through the generation of a azimuthal magnetic field similar to a Z pinch. Taking into account increased internal pressure resulting from the nonohmic process, an equilibrium pinch configuration is formed with currents in the multi-megampere range, with significant reduction in heat conduction losses. Relative to the typical classical Z-pinch, the generation of the anomalous pinch is considerably faster.

For a solid relativistic electron beam schematically illustrated in FIG. 11, the anomalously generated azimuthal magnetic field 150 and heated plasma column 148 is illustrated in FIG. 23. The axial nonuniformity in the azimuthal magnetic field strength of azimuthal magnetic field 150 is similiar to the energy deposition illustrated in FIG. 6. Primary energy loss from the anomalous pinch is indicated by arrows. The presence of an external axial magnetic field and proximity of the radial wall, together provide stable operation.

FIG. 24 is a schematic illustration of the arrangement schematically disclosed in FIG. 11 and disclosed in the above referenced copending application for producing an anomalous pinch. As shown, relativistic electron beam generator 152 produces a solid relativistic beam 154 which propagates through the vacuum tube and adiabatic compressor 156 and adjacent modulator 158. The relativistic electron beam 154 then penetrates foil 160, passes through the low-density plasma channel 162, penetrates foil 164, and anomalously transfers a fraction of its energy and momentum to the target plasma 170 to generate the anomalous pinch illustrated in FIG. 23. Windows 172 and 174 allow the laser ionization beam 178 to penetrate the target plasma container 168 and low-density gas chamber 166. A salt or sapphire window is used for CO₂ or HF lasers, respectively. An ionization beam intensity of 10⁹ to 10¹⁰ watts/cm² is sufficient to fully ionize the plasma.

A fully-ionized plasma with sufficient axial uniformity can be formed using the configuration shown in FIG. 24. The laser energy is transferred to the target plasma through inverse Bremsstrahlung. Consequently, the target plasma exhibits a slightly decreasing gradient along the direction of propagation of the relativistic electron beam 154. Such a decreasing gradient tends to increase the strength of the deposition, since its effect on the nonlinear dynamics is similar to premodulation. In fact, the ability of the streaming instabilities to counteract self-consistent plasma hydrodynamic gradients is related to this dynamic effect.

FIG. 25 is an alternative arrangement in which two lasers 208 and 210 apply ionization beams 212 and 214 transverse to the axis of the relativistic electron beam 182. Windows 204 and 206 in the low-density gas chamber 194 and windows 200 and 202 in the target plasma container 196 allow passage of the ionization beams to the target plasma 198. FIG. 26 is a schematic end view of an additional alternative arrangement utilizing three lasers 234, 236, and 238 which produce ionization beams 240, 242 and 244. Windows 228, 230 and 232 in the low-density gas chamber 216 and windows 222, 224 and 226 in the target plasma container 218 provide ionization beams 240, 242 and 244 access to the target plasma 220. The advantage of the arrangement shown in FIG. 26 is that lasers 234, 236 and 238 are arranged in an off-axis position such that laser beams 240, 242 and 244 are not directed at other lasers.

Although the single laser beam configuration shown in FIG. 24 produces the desired target plasma, additional magnetic field energy is required to deflect the residual relativistic electron beam so that the electron beam does not impinge upon laser 176. Also, the cost and technology associated with a single large laser is greater than with a number of smaller lasers with the same combined energy. Thus, the multiple laser configurations shown in FIGS. 25 and 26 are considered the preferred method of operation.

The preceding laser configurations are also appropriate for systems which use the high-energy density plasma to drive a fast liner to implode a structured microsphere according to the present invention, schematically shown in FIG. 12. Since the laser intensity is quite low, the hot electron spectrum generated by such a beam interacting directly with a power multiplication device is negligible. The components of FIG. 11 and their operation are identical to the components of FIG. 12 with the exception of the target plasma container 66 and relativistic electron beam 34. Similarly, the deposition of electron beam energy in the target plasma 112 occurs in the same manner described with respect to FIGS. 5, 6, 11 and 22 to 26. Therefore, the remaining disclosure of FIGS. 27 through 38 relates only to the manner in which a hot annular plasma 112 drives a fast liner according to the invention disclosed in copending application Ser. No. 9,703 entitled "Device and Method for Relativistic Electron Beam Heating of a High-Density Plasma to Drive Fast Liners" filed Feb. 5, 1979 by Lester E. Thode, and a fast liner to implode a structured microsphere according to the present invention.

Historically, high explosives or magnetically driven thin, cylindrical metallic shells have been referred to as liners. These hybrid devices incorporate concepts common to both magnetic and inertial confinement of plasma. Liners have been used to compress magnetic fields, compress and heat magnetically confined plasmas, and generate radiation. According to the present invention, this type of power multiplication device can be generalized to include spherical and ellipsoidal shapes. Since the liners are multilayer in design, they are much like laser fusion pellets.

A configuration suitable for driving fast spherical or cylindrical liners, such as disclosed in the above referenced copending application Ser. No. 9,703 entitled "Device and Method for Relativistic Electron Beam Heating of a High-Density Plasma to Drive Fast Liners" filed Feb. 5, 1979 by Lester E. Thode, is shown in FIGS. 27 and 28, respectively. As shown in FIGS. 27 and 28, a single laser ionization beam 252 entering through window 254 is used. Multiple laser ionization configurations, as shown in FIGS. 25 and 26, may be employed to obtain full ionization. The use of lasers for preionization lowers the relativistic electron beam technology requirements as disclosed above. Thus, the laser ionization sources should be considered as optional.

Referring again to FIGS. 27 and 28, an annular relativistic electron beam 260 which corresponds to beam 76 produced by the device of FIG. 12, penetrates the initiation foil 246, which also acts as an end plug to contain the low-temperature plasma or gas. As the voltage and current density rise, the anomalous coupling coefficient increases to its optimal value, and the beam transfers a large fraction of its energy and momentum to the annular plasma region 258. The beam driven azimuthal magnetic field 256, in turn, directs the annular plasma thermal energy to the fast spherical liner 250 or fast cylindrical liner 262. Since the source of the azimuthal magnetic field 256 is the result of an axial current flow in the annular plasma 258, magnetic field 256 is not present in the vicinity of the fast spherical liner 250 or fast cylindrical liner 262. The presence of an axial external magnetic field generated by external magnetic field source 110 shown in FIG. 12, can be used to increase the anomalous coupling coefficient. However, since the annular plasma column 258 is very high beta, the external magnetic field produced by source 110 is excluded during operation.

The radial wall of the plasma target container 248 is sufficiently thick to ensure magnetic flux containment and sufficiently massive to provide radial inertial confinement (tamper) on the relativistic electron beam time scale, i.e. ≲100 ns. Thus, radial energy loss to the container wall is limited by both the azimuthal magnetic field 256 and excluded external magnetic field produced by source 110. Heat conduction is limited axially on the beam time scale by the lower axial temperature gradient, azimuthal magnetic field 256, and self-mirroring of the external magnetic field 110. Thus, the geometry takes advantage of anomalous coupling and classical heat conduction to rapidly and efficiently remove energy from the relativistic electron beam 260 and transport it to the fast liner.

A cross-sectional view of the basic configuration with dual laser ionization beams 268 and 270, 282 and 284 for driving fast liners as disclosed in the above referenced copending application is shown in FIGS. 29 and 30, respectively. In this configuration, windows 264 and 266, 278 and 280 are placed in the radial wall of the plasma container. The heated annular plasmas 274 and 286 drive the spherical and cylindrical fast liner to implosion by explosive or ablative means as disclosed previously.

Detail of the fast spherical liner 250 and fast cylindrical liner 262 as disclosed in the above referenced application is shown in FIGS. 31 and 32, respectively. Each of the fast liners consists of ablators 292 and 298, pushers 294 and 300 and solid buffers 296 and 302. The ablator is boiled off through heat conduction, to propel the pusher and solid buffer to high-implosion velocity. Since the thermal conductivity of a plasma is a strong function of temperature, the rate at which energy is transported to the liner increases in time throughout the beam pulse. Thus, some natural shaping of the plasma driving source is obtained. Such shaping leads to stronger compression and heating of the gas fuel 272 and 288, as disclosed by R. J. Mason et al., Phys. Fluids 18, 814 (1975) and S. D. Bertke et al., Nucl. Fusion 18, 509 (1978).

Structured spherical pellets similar to the liner 250 have been studied extensively with respect to laser implosion. The ablators 292 and 298 of both the spherical and cylindrical liners are a low Z, low mass density material such as LiDT, Be, ND₃ BT₃, boron hydride, or CDT. Pushers 294 and 300 are typically a higher Z and mass density material such as glass, aluminum, gold, or nickel. Plastic embedded with high Z atoms is also used. Solid DT or LiDT can be used for the solid buffers 296 and 302. Depending upon the desired implosion velocity and various stability considerations, the total mass of fast liner 250 and 262 varies from 1 to 100 milligrams.

In the case of the cylindrical liner 262, shaping minimizes loss of the enclosed fuel 288 out the ends, as shown in FIG. 32. Alternatively, the ends can be plugged if the annular plasma 286 and fuel 288 are different. For example, gas fuel 272 and 288 for both spherical and enclosed cylindrical liner may comprise DT, DD, DHe³, HLi⁶, or HB¹¹ whereas the target plasma 274 and 286 may comprise H₂, He, DT, DD, or other low Z gas. An ellipsoidal shaped liner can also be used.

FIG. 33 illustrates another embodiment utilizing a fast liner. According to FIG. 33, a solid beam penetrates foil 320 to form an anomalous pinch 318 within the cylindrical liner 262, which is, in turn, driven by an annular beam entering through foil 304. Deflector 306 provides initial ionization in the anomalous pinch region 318. The cylindrical liner 262 implodes upon the plasma 318 to enhance compression and burn.

Target geometry, utilizing two annular relativistic electron beams to drive a spherical liner 250 is schematically illustrated in FIG. 34. In operation, beam deflection is minimized as beams 326 and 328 pass through the beam driven azimuthal magnetic field regions, as indicated in FIG. 14.

According to the present invention, the approach of obtaining an intense radiation, neutron and/or alpha particle source is to use a high-density, multi-kilovolt relativistic electron beam produced plasma to drive a fast liner, which then produces an intense, shaped energy pulse suitable for imploding a structured microsphere such as disclosed R. J. Mason, Phys. Fluids 18, 814 (1975) and Los Alamos Scientific Report LA-5898-MS (October 1975), S. D. Bertke et al., Nucl. Fusion 18, 509 (1978), and G. S. Fraley et al., Phys. Fluids 17, 474 (1974). Such a microsphere can be filled with either DT, DD, DHe³ HLi⁶, or HB¹¹, for example.

The basic geometry of the approach of the present invention is illustrated in FIGS. 35 and 36, for a single laser ionization beam 340 entering through window 342. The multiple laser ionization configurations as shown in FIGS. 25 and 26 can also be used. As pointed out above, the use of lasers for preionization, lowers the relativisitc electron beam technology requirements. Therefore, the laser ionization sources should be considered as optional.

An annular relativistic electron beam 344 penetrates the initiation foil 346, which also acts as an end plug to contain the low-temperature plasma. As the voltage and current density rise, the anomalous coupling coefficient increases to its optimal value, and the beam transfers a large fraction of its energy and momentum to the annular plasma region 348. The beam driven azimuthal magnetic field 350, in turn, directs annular plasma 348 thermal energy to the fast spherical liner 352 of FIG. 35, or fast cylindrical liner 354 of FIG. 36. Since the source of the azimuthal magnetic field 350 is the result of an axial current flow in the annular plasma 348, resulting from conservation of momentum, the azimuthal magnetic field 350 is not present in the vicinity of the fast spherical liner 352 or fast cylindrical liner 354. The presence of an axial external magnetic field generated by source 110 of FIG. 12 can be used to increase the anomalous coupling coefficient. However, since the annular plasma column 348 and plasma engulfing the liner are very high beta, the external magnetic field generated by source 110 of FIG. 12 is rapidly excluded.

The radial wall of the plasma target container 356 is sufficiently thick to ensure magnetic flux containment and sufficiently massive to provide radial inertial confinement (tamper) on the relativistic electron beam time scale, i.e. ≲100 ns. Thus, radial energy loss to the container wall is limited by both the azimuthal magnetic field 350 and excluded external magnetic field generated by source 110 of FIG. 12. Heat conduction is limited axially on the beam time scale by the lower axial temperature gradient, azimuthal magnetic field 350, and self-mirroring of the external magnetic field generated by source 110. Thus, the geometry takes advantage of anomalous coupling and classical heat conduction to rapidly and efficiently remove energy from the relativistic electron beam 344 and transport that energy to the fast liners 352 and 354.

As shown in FIGS. 37 and 38, the fast liners 352 and 354 consist of ablators 360 and 362, pushers 364 and 366, and solid buffer 368 or 370. The ablator is boiled off through heat conduction, to propel the pusher and solid buffer to high implosion velocity. The ablators 360 and 362 are low Z, low mass density material such as LiDT, Be, ND₃ BT3, boron hydride, or CDT. Pushers 364 and 366 are typically a higher Z and mass density material such as glass, aluminum, gold, nickel or plastic embedded with high Z atoms. Solid DT or LiDT can be used for solid buffers 368 and 370. Depending upon the implosion velocity desired and stability considerations, the total mass of fast liners 352 and 354 illustrated in FIGS. 37 and 38, respectively, is from 1 milligram to 100 milligrams. Also, the driver gas 372 and 374 of FIGS. 37 and 38, respectively, may comprise DT, DD, or higher Z gas such as N₂, Ar, and Kr.

In operation, as the liner collapses, the density and temperature of buffer gases 372 and 374, in contact with the microsphere 358, increases in time. Such pulse shaping, which is different for fast spherical liner 352 and fast cylindrical liner 354, allows shock overtaking as pointed out in the above reference articles by R. J. Mason et al. and S. D. Berke et al., producing high compression of the ablatively driven microsphere 358. Using the high-density thermal gas 372 and 372 of FIGS. 37 and 38, respectively, for implosion, reduces the preheating problem associated with the microsphere 358.

Basic detail of the microsphere 358 is shown in FIGS. 37 and 38. The materials used for ablators 376 and 378, pushers 380 and 382, solid buffers 384 and 386, and gas fuel 388 and 390 are similar to those set forth for liners 352 and 354. Also, multiple pusher configurations utilizing velocity multiplication to obtain very high implosion velocities can also be incorporated into the structured microsphere 358.

The present invention therefore provides a device and method for driving a fast liner with a hot plasma to, in turn, drive a structured microsphere to implosion. In this manner, natural pulse shaping generates high implosion velocities to generate energy in the form of radiation, neutrons, and/or alpha particles. By optimizing the extremely powerful streaming instabilities to heat the high-density plasma according to method (a), the present invention provides efficient deposition of beam energy to heat the plasma and drive the fast liner to implode the microsphere. The implosion therefore generates high-intensity radiation, neutrons, and/or alpha particles utilizing currently available technology.

Obviously, many modifications and variations of the present invention are possible in light of the above teachings. It is therefore to be understood that within the scope of the appended claims the invention may be practiced otherwise than as specifically described and that subject matter disclosed herein shall not be precluded from being later claimed in the present application or a continuation, continuation-in-part, or reissue application. 

What is desired to be secured as Letters Patent of the United States is:
 1. A device for generating energy in the form of radiation and neutrons comprising:means for generating an annular relativistic electron beam having a voltage of at least 3 MeV, a current density of at least 1 kA/cm² and ##EQU3## where N is the line density of the beam, re is the classical electron radius, v is the beam velocity and c is the speed of light. a target plasma chamber containing a high-density gas; a fast liner disposed within said target plasma chamber; a microsphere disposed within said fast liner; means for ionizing said high-density gas to generate a plasma; means for initiating convective oscillations in said plasma upon application of said annular relativistic electron beam such that streaming instabilities are produced in said plasma causing electron beam energy to be deposited in a plasma annulus surrounding said fast liner to heat said plasma annulus to kilovolt temperatures and drive an axial current causing said electron beam energy deposited in said plasma annulus to converge on said fast liner and drive said fast liner to generate a shaped energy pulse for imploding a structured microsphere and thereby generated energy in the form of radiation and neutrons means for extracting useful energy in a controlled manner from said microsphere imploded by said liner, said microsphere giving off useful energy in a controlled manner when imploded by said liner.
 2. The device of claim 1 wherein said fast liner comprises a fast spherical liner.
 3. The device of claim 1 wherein said fast liner comprises a fast cylindrical liner.
 4. The device of claim 1 wherein said means for ionizing said high-density gas comprises at least one laser.
 5. The device of claim 1 wherein said means for initiating convective oscillations comprises a thin, low-density foil.
 6. The device of claim 2 wherein said fast spherical liner comprises outer ablative layer, a middle pusher layer, and an inner buffer layer.
 7. The device of claim 3 wherein said fast cylindrical liner comprises an ablator, a pusher, and a buffer.
 8. The device of claim 1 further comprising means for causing said fast liner to be explosively driven.
 9. The device of claim 1 further comprising means for causing said fast liner to be ablatively driven.
 10. The device of claim 1 wherein said microsphere is filled with DT.
 11. The device of claim 1 wherein said microsphere is filled with DD.
 12. The device of claim 1 wherein said microsphere is filled with DHe³.
 13. The device of claim 1 wherein said microsphere is filled with HLi⁶.
 14. The device of claim 1 wherein said microsphere is filled with HB¹¹.
 15. A device for producing energy in the form of radiation and neutrons comprising:a high-density plasma disposed within a target chamber; a fast liner disposed within said target chamber; a microsphere disposed within said fast liner; means for producing a relativistic electron beam having a voltage of at least 3MeV and having a current density of at least 1 KA/cm² and ##EQU4## where N is the line density of the beam electrons, re is the classical electron radius, v is the beam velocity and c is the speed of light, which beam is sufficient to penetrate said target chamber and initiate convective oscillations in said high-density plasma such that energy is transferred from said relativistic electron beam to said plasma to heat an annulus of said plasma to kilovolt temperatures and drive said fast liner to generate an intense, shaped energy pulse to implode said microsphere and produce said energy means for extracting useful energy in a controlled manner from said microsphere imploded by said liner, said microsphere giving off useful energy in a controlled manner when imploded by said liner.
 16. The device of claim 15 further comprising means for explosively driving said fast liner.
 17. The device of claim 15 further comprising means for ablatively driving said fast liner.
 18. The device of claim 15 wherein said fast liner comprises a spherical fast liner.
 19. The device of claim 15 wherein said fast liner comprises a cylindrical fast liner.
 20. The device of claim 15 wherein said high-density plasma comprises DT.
 21. The device of claim 15 wherein said high-density plasma comprises DD.
 22. The device of claim 15 wherein said liner is filled with a DD driver gas.
 23. The device of claim 15 wherein said liner is filled with a DT driver gas.
 24. The device of claim 15 wherein said liner is filled with a N₂ buffer gas.
 25. The device of claim 15 wherein said liner is filled with a Ar buffer gas.
 26. The device of claim 15 wherein said liner is filled with a moderate Z gas.
 27. The device of claim 15 wherein said microsphere is filled with DT.
 28. The device of claim 15 wherein said microsphere is filled with DD.
 29. The device of claim 15 wherein said microsphere is filled with DHe³.
 30. The device of claim 15 wherein said microsphere is filled with HLi⁶.
 31. The device of claim 15 wherein said microsphere is filled with HB¹¹.
 32. A hot plasma device comprising:means for retaining a high-density gas within a predetermined volume; means for ionizing said gas to produce a high-density plasma; a fast liner disposed within said means for retaining said high-density gas; a microsphere disposed within said fast liner; means for generating an annular relativistic electron beam having a voltage of at least 3 MeV and a current density of at least 1 KA/cm² and ##EQU5## where N is the line density of the beam electrons, re is the classical electron radius, v is the beam velocity and c is the speed of light, which beam is sufficient to overcome classical scattering upon penetrating said means for retaining said high-density gas so as to generate streaming instabilities in said high-density plasma causing said relativistic electron beam to heat an annulus of said high-density plasma surrounding said fast liner to kilovolt temperatures to drive said fast liner to convergence and implode said microsphere to generate said hot plasma means for extracting useful energy in a controlled manner from said microsphere imploded by said liner, said microsphere giving off useful energy in a controlled manner when imploded by said liner.
 33. The device of claim 32 wherein said fast liner has an ablator, a pusher, and a buffer.
 34. The device of claim 32 wherein said fast liner comprises a spherical fast liner.
 35. The device of claim 32 wherein said fast liner comprises a cylindrical fast liner.
 36. The device of claim 32 wherein said high-density plasma comprises DT.
 37. The device of claim 32 wherein said high-density plasma comprises DD.
 38. The device of claim 32 wherein said high-density plasma comprises HB.
 39. The device of claim 28 wherein said microsphere is filled with DT.
 40. The device of claim 28 wherein said microsphere is filled with DD.
 41. The device of claim 28 wherein said microsphere is filled with DHe³.
 42. The device of claim 1 wherein said microsphere is filled with HLi⁶.
 43. The device of claim 28 wherein said microsphere is filled with HB¹¹.
 44. A method of producing a hot plasma comprising:confining a high-density gas within a target chamber; ionizing said gas to produce a high-density plasma; generating an annular relativistic electron beam having a voltage of at least 3 MeV and a current density of at least 1 KA/cm² and ##EQU6## where N is the line density of the beam electrons, re is the classical electron radius, v is the beam velocity and c is the speed of light, which beam is sufficient to penetrate said target chamber with negligible scattering to produce streaming instabilities in said plasma causing said electron beam to heat an annulus of said high-density plasma surrounding a fast liner containing a microsphere to drive said fast liner to convergence to generate a high-power pulse and implode said microsphere to generate said hot plasma means for extracting useful energy in a controlled manner from said microsphere imploded by said liner, said microsphere giving off useful energy in a controlled manner when imploded by said liner. 